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...current survey demonstrates a troubling loss of popular support for the Reagan presidency. But it also suggests that, like Presidents before him, Reagan has simply passed through the period of mild euphoria that attends the early months of each new Administration. His loss of popular support is far from irreversible. An improved economy and the prospect of a budget more nearly in balance would doubtless lift his domestic ratings. It remains to be seen whether more coherent and consistent explanations of the Administration's foreign policy will influence public attitudes, or whether the statistical evidence of public disagreement will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reagan's Rising Woes | 4/5/1982 | See Source »

Both the rising criticism and the newly mild presidential response were on display last week, when Reagan visited Manhattan to receive a gold medal from the National Conference of Christians and Jews for "courageous leadership in governmental, civic and humanitarian affairs." In contrast to the friendly demonstrations that had greeted the President in Oklahoma only the week before, thousands of outraged protesters outside the New York Hilton Hotel broke into chants of "Money for jobs, not for war, U.S. out of El Salvador!" Ten blocks away, at the Lincoln Center campus of Fordham University, 300 people, including a few members...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Trying to Be Mr. Nice Guy | 4/5/1982 | See Source »

DIED. Raymond ("Buddy") Parker, 68, mild-mannered former Detroit Lions head coach who transformed a woeful, second-division football team into a gridiron juggernaut, winning the national championship in 1952 and 1953; of complications from a ruptured ulcer; in Kaufman, Texas. Parker is credited with the development of the two-minute drill, a predetermined series of plays used near the end of a half or a game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Apr. 5, 1982 | 4/5/1982 | See Source »

...never been north of Holland. His Haarlempjes, or "Views of Haarlem," were also bread and butter; their usual format is one of the best-loved images of Dutch landscape-a wide, flat horizon, punctuated by a church tower, overwhelmed by blowing clouds and permeated by Ruisdael's mild northern light. They repeat themselves, but a man has a right to his own cliches-up to a point...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Opening a Path to Natural Vision | 3/29/1982 | See Source »

...Hollister Hills Recreational Park south of town, whole packs of mild-mannered motorcyclists ride up and down the fault every weekend for $1.50 a day. Campers arriving early enough can pitch their tents or park their vans right on the fault line and get a closeup look at the offset streams, broken rock formations and hills forged by the geologic, scraping. The park, according to local Businessman Howard Harris, "has the most active movement in the world," with an average creep of 11 mm (.44 in.) each day. But visitors expecting to see a gaping fracture in the earth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In California: Tremors on the Fault | 3/22/1982 | See Source »

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